Laura Britton
Assistant Professor Adjunct
Laura Britton, AIA is an architect, author, and frequent lecturer on the subject of mass timber. As an Associate at Shigeru Ban Architects, Laura has led and contributed to a diverse range of projects, including Kentucky Owl Park, a bourbon distillery campus; Terrace House, a hybrid mass timber residential tower; and Cast Iron House, an adaptive reuse of a landmarked 19th-century commercial building. Prior to joining SBA, she worked in the offices of Sou Fujimoto Architects, Atelier Bow-Wow, LTL Architects, and Pickard Chilton Architects.
Laura is the author-editor of Shigeru Ban: Timber in Architecture (Rizzoli, 2022). The book traces the evolution of 45 wood projects from concept through construction, demonstrating the challenges and merits of wood buildings through essays, technical drawings, and photographs.
As an advocate for environmentally responsible approaches to mass timber, Laura has lectured widely on decarbonization and the benefits of interdisciplinary approaches to design and construction. Most recently, she presented at the AIA International Spring Conference, AIA Colorado Practice + Design Conference, the Center for Architecture, the Skyscraper Museum, and Telluride Art + Architecture. She currently serves on the Steering Committee for the International Mass Timber Conference and is a member of the Colorado Mass Timber Coalition.
Laura holds a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University with Distinction in Architecture and a Master of Architecture from Princeton University School of Architecture, where she was a recipient of the Howard Crosby Butler Traveling Fellowship and the Henry Adams AIA Medal.
Laura's CV is available here.
Projects
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“Shigeru Ban: Timber in Architecture” (Rizzoli, 2022)
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Kentucky Owl Park
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“Shigeru Ban: Timber in Architecture” (Rizzoli, 2022)
Though it is one of the world’s oldest building materials, wood is still revolutionizing the way buildings are designed and constructed today. Shigeru Ban: Timber in Architecture (Rizzoli, 2022) presents the trajectory of 45 works from concept through construction, demonstrating the challenges and merits of wood buildings through essays, technical drawings, and photographs.
Kentucky Owl Park
Kentucky Owl Park is a bourbon production and tourism campus consisting of a distillery, bottling center, rickhouses, visitor center, and train station, situated in a reclaimed 420-acre limestone quarry. Several buildings reinterpret 19th-century industrial building typologies using contemporary mass timber structures, while others pioneer novel forms.